Plumbing sector slow to take up social media

bristanBristan, the showers and taps brand, has discovered that the UK plumbing sector is falling behind other UK industries when it comes to engaging with customers online.

After undertaking its largest ever market survey, Bristan found that only 44% of installers frequently use social media. However, with nearly 60% of the UK population regularly communicating via social media the plumbing industry is missing a valuable channel to connect with its customers.

To make matters worse, only 46% of installers currently have a website compared to the national average of 71% for UK SMEs, which could mean that some plumbers may be missing out on valuable revenue by not making themselves more visible online.

However, the Bristan survey did demonstrate that installers are ahead of the UK population when it comes to some forms of technology, with more than 85% of installers surveyed saying they use a smart phone. This figure is above the national average of 48.4% of UK residents and 60.4% of UK mobile phone users.

Fiona Bowyer, head of marketing at Bristan, said:

The rise of social media is no passing fad. With statistics now showing that social media is here to stay installers need to fully embrace these channels to maximise the way they can communicate with their customers. 

As more and more people turn to social media for project recommendations or to research suppliers, the likes of Facebook and Twitter are becoming vitally important not only to maintain a business’ brand, but also to enable dealers to capitalise on potential sales leads.

Designed specially to gain a view of the industry through the eyes of the people that work within it, the Bristan ‘Connect’ research was carried out over four months, utilising an online survey, focus groups and a numerous job shadowing days, and engaged with close to 1,000 installers from across the country. The in-depth analysis gauged the installers’ attitudes towards things such as working practices, client engagement, product knowledge and buying habits.

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Vaillant to host UK-wide open days for renewable technology

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Vaillant is set to host a series of UK-wide open days to demonstrate the role of renewable technology in reducing fuel poverty and carbon emissions for the social housing sector to landlords, renewables installers and councils.

The Sustainable Heating days will be held at Vaillant’s head office in Belper, Derbyshire; Centres of Excellence, in Elland, West Yorkshire; Bristol; Cambridge; Maidstone; and Scotland, from February 13, 2014. The events will focus on educating landlords on how to access government funding and examples of Vaillant renewables projects to show the technology in action.

Speeches will be given by guest speakers from partners and the Department of Energy and Climate Change. A prize draw of £1,000 towards a community investment fund for landlords will be held at the close of each event.

The focus on helping landlords to obtain funding is extremely timely, following the publication of recent research by Alliance Procurement, the National Energy Foundation and the University of Salford. The research found that the lack of funding support remains the highest barrier to retrofitting in the social housing sector. Approximately 37% of landlords said addressing fuel poverty and reducing fuel bills for tenants were their key drivers for considering a retrofit.

John Bailey, commercial and renewables system director at Vaillant, said:

Renewable technology can deliver significant savings for the social housing sector, and play a significant role in reducing fuel poverty. It’s extremely rewarding to share our renewable expertise with this audience as part of our commitment to the social housing sector.

Training dates:
Elland, Yorkshire: February 13
Belper, Derbyshire: February 18
Bristol: February 20
Cambridge: February 25
Maidstone: February 26
Scotland: March 4

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SingStar: Shower Edition

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IoR aims to boost awareness of refrigerant leaks at ACR Show

ioraimstoboostawarenessofrefrigerantleakesatacrshowThe Institute of Refrigeration is launching an info-blitz at the forthcoming ACR Show 2014 to raise awareness of the vital importance of cutting refrigerant leaks from refrigeration and air conditioning systems.

Its programme of expert briefings, which take place next week, from 11-13 February, at the NEC in Birmingham, is aimed at the industry and end users and will build on the organisation’s award-winning REAL Zero campaign.

Industry experts, including John Ellis, Jane Gartshore, Gordon Adams, Graeme Maidment, Steve Benton and Glen Moore, will provide free briefings to visitors on key issues related to refrigerant leakage and how to prevent and minimise it.

 

Topics include:

· Leaks and leak detection – how to get the best out of your leak detector and locations of the most common leaks;
· Are you using the right copper tube for your refrigerant?
· Common causes of compressor failure – and how to avoid them;
· REAL Zero – preventing and finding leaks of alternative refrigerants, R744, HCs, R32 and HFOs;
· Understanding pH diagrams for diagnosing faults and improving system operation;
· Pressure testing for strength and leak tightness and how Gay-Lussac helps!
· Indirect leak testing for air conditioning units.

The organisation is also staging a series of highly practical sessions aimed at service engineers, enabling them to refresh their skills and test current knowledge.

Visitors can take an optional test at the end of presentations to gain an IOR Certificate of Continuing Professional Development, useful for career development.

The talks will include hands-on demonstrations and exercises, supported by IOR technical guides.

IOR members and Service Engineers can reserve their place in advance. Visitors will also be able to sign up or walk-in on the day to individual sessions if places are available.

Miriam Rodway, secretary of The Institute of Refrigeration, said:

We are looking forward to what promises to be a really exciting event. Our members are always keen to attend and catch up with the latest news and technical issues. Many non-members also visit us at the show to enquire about joining. We expect our stand to be a hub of activity.

The show is the only national exhibition dedicated to the UK air conditioning and refrigeration industry, and is backed by leading air conditioning supplier and headline sponsor, Daikin UK.

The exhibition features more than 100 leading companies, and has a high profile technical and business seminar programme – free to visitors – taking place on the show floor.

To register for the show visit: www.acrshow.co.uk

For details of the Institute of Refrigeration briefings visitwww.ior.org.uk/ior_news.php

For details on exhibiting contact Jan Thorpe on 01622 699 113, or Karena Cooper on 01622 699150 (email jthorpe@datateam.co.uk orkcooper@datateam.co.uk)

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MEPs call for 40% cut in for CO2 emissions

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MEPs called on Wednesday for a 40 per cent cut in CO2 emissions, a 30 per cent target for renewable energy and a 40 per cent target for energy efficiency by 2030, under the EU’s new long-term climate-change policy.

MEPs say these targets should be binding. MEPs also criticise the European Commission’s recent proposals as short-sighted and unambitious.

The co-rapporteur for the environment committee, Anne Delvaux said:

The price of energy seriously affects companies, industry and, more specifically, our citizens. If we want to reduce our energy imports we have to produce more in Europe, by making better and more efficient use of our resources

If we have a broad energy mix with greater energy efficiency, this is the best option to reduce to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, to encourage new technologies and innovation, create jobs, and change our economies into greener economies. This is why we need three binding objectives.

Konrad Szymański (ECR, PL), co-rapporteur from the industry committee added:

This result is not satisfactory. We are promising ourselves, Europeans and European industry, that this new climate policy would be realistic, flexible and cost- efficient.

This are very good assumptions. However, if we double the emission reduction target after 2020, it is not realistic. It is a road to reduce the competitiveness of European industry.

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